Migratory flight of insect pests within a year-round distribution: European corn borer as a case study

Insect migratory flight differs fundamentally from most other kinds of flight behavior, in that it is non-appetitive. The adult is not searching for anything, and migratory flight is not terminated by encounters with potential resources. Many insect pests of agricultural crops are long-distance migr...

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Main Author: Thomas W. Sappington
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: KeAi Communications Co., Ltd. 2018-07-01
Series:Journal of Integrative Agriculture
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2095311918619690
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author Thomas W. Sappington
author_facet Thomas W. Sappington
author_sort Thomas W. Sappington
collection DOAJ
description Insect migratory flight differs fundamentally from most other kinds of flight behavior, in that it is non-appetitive. The adult is not searching for anything, and migratory flight is not terminated by encounters with potential resources. Many insect pests of agricultural crops are long-distance migrants, moving from lower latitudes where they overwinter to higher latitudes in the spring to exploit superabundant, but seasonally ephemeral, host crops. The migratory nature of these pests is somewhat easy to recognize because of their sudden appearance in areas where they had been absent only a day or two earlier. Many other serious pests survive hostile winter conditions by diapausing, and therefore do not require migration to move between overwintering and breeding ranges. Yet there is evidence of migratory behavior engaged in by several pest species that inhabit high latitudes year-round. In these cases, the consequences of migratory flight are not immediately noticeable at the population level, because migration takes place for the most part within their larger year-round distribution. Nevertheless, the potential population-level consequences can be quite important in the contexts of pest management and insect resistance management. As a case study, I review the evidence for migratory flight behavior by individual European corn borer adults, and discuss the importance of understanding it. The kind of migratory behavior posited for pest species inhabiting a permanent distribution may be more common than we realize.
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spelling doaj-art-c4015f0cb8b74f86b9ed51c5fd6c39242025-08-20T03:58:54ZengKeAi Communications Co., Ltd.Journal of Integrative Agriculture2095-31192018-07-011771485150510.1016/S2095-3119(18)61969-0Migratory flight of insect pests within a year-round distribution: European corn borer as a case studyThomas W. Sappington0Correspondence Thomas W. Sappington; Corn Insects and Crop Genetics Research Unit, Agricultural Research Service, USDA, Ames, IA 50011, USAInsect migratory flight differs fundamentally from most other kinds of flight behavior, in that it is non-appetitive. The adult is not searching for anything, and migratory flight is not terminated by encounters with potential resources. Many insect pests of agricultural crops are long-distance migrants, moving from lower latitudes where they overwinter to higher latitudes in the spring to exploit superabundant, but seasonally ephemeral, host crops. The migratory nature of these pests is somewhat easy to recognize because of their sudden appearance in areas where they had been absent only a day or two earlier. Many other serious pests survive hostile winter conditions by diapausing, and therefore do not require migration to move between overwintering and breeding ranges. Yet there is evidence of migratory behavior engaged in by several pest species that inhabit high latitudes year-round. In these cases, the consequences of migratory flight are not immediately noticeable at the population level, because migration takes place for the most part within their larger year-round distribution. Nevertheless, the potential population-level consequences can be quite important in the contexts of pest management and insect resistance management. As a case study, I review the evidence for migratory flight behavior by individual European corn borer adults, and discuss the importance of understanding it. The kind of migratory behavior posited for pest species inhabiting a permanent distribution may be more common than we realize.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2095311918619690migrationdispersalflightmovement ecologyEuropean corn borerOstrinia nubilalis
spellingShingle Thomas W. Sappington
Migratory flight of insect pests within a year-round distribution: European corn borer as a case study
Journal of Integrative Agriculture
migration
dispersal
flight
movement ecology
European corn borer
Ostrinia nubilalis
title Migratory flight of insect pests within a year-round distribution: European corn borer as a case study
title_full Migratory flight of insect pests within a year-round distribution: European corn borer as a case study
title_fullStr Migratory flight of insect pests within a year-round distribution: European corn borer as a case study
title_full_unstemmed Migratory flight of insect pests within a year-round distribution: European corn borer as a case study
title_short Migratory flight of insect pests within a year-round distribution: European corn borer as a case study
title_sort migratory flight of insect pests within a year round distribution european corn borer as a case study
topic migration
dispersal
flight
movement ecology
European corn borer
Ostrinia nubilalis
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2095311918619690
work_keys_str_mv AT thomaswsappington migratoryflightofinsectpestswithinayearrounddistributioneuropeancornborerasacasestudy